"When that man wants something, he'll stop at nothing to get it. And I also believed in the good of him"
About this Quote
A backhanded blessing dressed up as loyalty, Marla Maples' line captures the peculiar emotional math required to love someone defined by appetite. "He'll stop at nothing" is admiration and alarm in the same breath: a portrait of willpower so absolute it flirts with menace. The phrasing doesn’t just describe ambition; it normalizes collateral damage as a personality trait, the way certain public men get narrated as forces of nature rather than agents with choices.
Then comes the pivot: "And I also believed in the good of him". The "also" does heavy lifting. It signals a second, competing story Maples is trying to keep alive, as if goodness is a supplemental add-on to the more observable truth of relentlessness. It's the rhetoric of someone retrofitting conscience onto drive, insisting the person isn't only his hunger. The sentence reads like a self-justification as much as a defense of him: if she can locate "good", then the relationship, the proximity to power, the compromises, all feel less fraught.
Context matters because Maples isn't a political strategist or a biographer; she's an actress speaking from within a tabloid-era romance that became part of a larger American mythology about celebrity businessmen. The quote functions as witness testimony filtered through affection and damage control: she concedes the ruthlessness the public already suspects, then offers a moral counterweight. It's not a contradiction so much as a survival strategy - the need to believe that raw ambition can be steered by decency, even when the evidence keeps sprinting the other way.
Then comes the pivot: "And I also believed in the good of him". The "also" does heavy lifting. It signals a second, competing story Maples is trying to keep alive, as if goodness is a supplemental add-on to the more observable truth of relentlessness. It's the rhetoric of someone retrofitting conscience onto drive, insisting the person isn't only his hunger. The sentence reads like a self-justification as much as a defense of him: if she can locate "good", then the relationship, the proximity to power, the compromises, all feel less fraught.
Context matters because Maples isn't a political strategist or a biographer; she's an actress speaking from within a tabloid-era romance that became part of a larger American mythology about celebrity businessmen. The quote functions as witness testimony filtered through affection and damage control: she concedes the ruthlessness the public already suspects, then offers a moral counterweight. It's not a contradiction so much as a survival strategy - the need to believe that raw ambition can be steered by decency, even when the evidence keeps sprinting the other way.
Quote Details
| Topic | Love |
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